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Other Governmental

Eligibility

You may purchase up to five years of service rendered as a full-time employee with a Michigan city, county, township, or village; another state government; or the federal government. (Also see Act 88 - Reciprocal Retirement Act)

Conditions

Only full-time employment can be purchased.

Your former employer(s) must certify your service.

You cannot purchase more than ten years total from any combination of universal buy-in, parental leave, or other governmental service.

If you are eligible to receive any employer contributions made on your behalf to a 401(k) or other qualified retirement plan, you cannot purchase the service unless you have relinquished all rights to the employer contributions.

If you have received any employer contributions made on your behalf to a 401(k) or other qualified retirement plan, you cannot purchase the service.

Distributions, transfers, or refunds are not considered a relinquishment.

This service cannot be used to satisfy vesting requirements.

You must be a contributing member of the Defined Benefit (DB) plan to initiate a purchase.

City, county, township, or village of Michigan: If at any point in time you accumulated enough service credit to qualify for a pension based on this service, you cannot purchase the service.

Other state or federal government: If at any point in time you accumulated enough service credit to qualify for a pension based on this service, you cannot purchase the service unless you have relinquished all rights to the pension benefit.

Cost

You may purchase any fraction of a year increment. Your cost for each year purchased will be a percentage of your previous highest fiscal year (October 1 through September 30) income earned as a state of Michigan employee. That percentage, or actuarial rate, is found in the Actuarial Cost Table.

The retirement plan information that appears on this website is intended to summarize basic provisions of Public Act 240 of 1943, as amended. Current laws, rates, and factors are subject to change. Should there be discrepancies between the information reflected here and the actual law, the provisions of the law govern.